Tag Archives: politics

Sad Day for Women’s Health

Even though three states three district courts and a Court of Appeal declared a nationwide ban on a procedure known as partial birth abortion, the US supreme court upheld the ban.

This amounted to the first restriction imposed on abortion rights since women won the right to terminate pregnancies in 1973. The 5-4 vote in favour of the ban was seen as a victory for President George W Bush and his social conservative allies in one of the most divisive debates in America.

The ACLU and the National Abortion Federation (NAF) have criticized the decision.
“Today’s decision has placed politics above protecting women’s health,” said Vicki Saporta, President and CEO of NAF.  “This ruling is a set back for all Americans who believe politicians should not legislate medical decision-making.  The decision disregards the opinion of leading doctors and medical organizations that oppose the ban because it is harmful to women’s health.”

Utah Planned Parenthood:
The breadth of this decision invites all kinds of interference in the doctor-patient relationship and opens the floodgates for Utah’s politicians to further limit access to abortion and reproductive health care.  This decision shows utter disregard for women’s health and safety and makes paramount the ideology of politicians and pays no heed to the expertise of medical professionals.

I will be providing more updates, commentary and actions as they occur….

Income Tax: Where It Is Actually Spent–WAR

Now that Income Tax Season is over, I thought I’d post the War Resisters League Pie Chart of how our taxes are really spent:

Where Your Income Tax Money Really Goes FY 2008

Total Outlays (Federal Funds): $2,387 billion
MILITARY: 51% and $1,228 billion
NON-MILITARY: 49% and $1,159 billion

FY2008 federal piechart

HOW THESE FIGURES WERE DETERMINED

Current military” includes Dept. of Defense ($585 billion), the military portion from other departments ($122 billion), and an unbudgetted estimate of supplemental appropriations ($20 billion). “Past military” represents veterans’ benefits plus 80% of the interest on the debt.*

The Government Deception

The pie chart below is the government view of the budget. This is a distortion of how our income tax dollars are spent because it includes Trust Funds (e.g., Social Security), and the expenses of past military spending are not distinguished from nonmilitary spending. For a more accurate representation of how your Federal income tax dollar is really spent, see the large chart (top).

the government's deceptive pie chart

Source:Washington Post , Feb. 6, 2007,
from Office of Management and Budget

These figures are from an analysis of detailed tables in the “Analytical Perspectives” book of the Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2008. The figures are federal funds, which do not include trust funds — such as Social Security — that are raised and spent separately from income taxes. What you pay (or don’t pay) by April 17, 2007, goes to the federal funds portion of the budget. The government practice of combining trust and federal funds began during the Vietnam War, thus making the human needs portion of the budget seem larger and the military portion smaller.

*Analysts differ on how much of the debt stems from the military; other groups estimate 50% to 60%. We use 80% because we believe if there had been no military spending most (if not all) of the national debt would have been eliminated. For further explanation, please see box at bottom of page.

MORE WAR MONEY

Cost of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars
(billions of dollars)

spending on war

U.S. Gov’t Accounting Office report, “Global War on Terrorism,” 7/18/06, www.gao.gov/new.items/d06885t.pdf (thru 2006); 2007 & 2008 numbers from current U.S. Budget; *Our FY2008 projected supplemental funding is based on estimates in the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments report by Steven Kosiak, 2/6/07, www.csbaonline.org, and because of the Administration’s past underprojections

Current Military
$727 billion:

• Military Personnel $136 billion
• Operation & Maint. $249 billion
• Procurement $111 billion
• Research & Dev. $70 billion
• Construction $10 billion
• Family Housing $4 billion
• DoD misc. $6 billion
• Retired Pay $52 billion
• DoE nuclear weapons $17 billion
• NASA (50%) $9 billion
• International Security $10 billion
• Homeland Secur. (military) $31 billion
• Exec. Office of President $1 billion
• other military (non-DoD) $1 billion
• plus … anticipated supplemental war spending requests of $20 billion in addition to $141 billion for Iraq and Afghanistan wars already incorporated into figures above

Past Military,
$461 billion:

• Veterans’ Benefits $85 billion
• Interest on national debt $376 billion (80% est. to be created by military spending)

Human Resources
$748 billion:

• Health/Human Services
• Soc. Sec. Administration
• Education Dept.
• Food/Nutrition programs
• Housing & Urban Dev.
• Labor Dept.
• other human resources.

General Government
$295 billion:

• Interest on debt (20%)
• Treasury • Government personnel • Justice Dept.
• State Dept.
• Homeland Security (17%)
• International Affairs
• NASA (50%)
• Judicial
• Legislative
• other general govt.

Physical Resources
$116 billion
:
• Agriculture
• Interior
• Transportation
• Homeland Security (17%)
• HUD
• Commerce
• Energy (non-military)
• Environmental Protection
• Nat. Science Fdtn.
• Army Corps Engineers
• Fed. Comm. Commission
• other physical resources

Photos of David Rovics House Party

The David Rovics House Party I helped organize at Free Speech Zone was a huge success.  The room was packed, the food was great, and the concert was superb. Here are some photos:

     
 

David Rovics – photos from tonight’s concert

Tonight’s concert at the U went well. About 50 people attended. Between David‘s sets the Salt Lake City Slam Poets performed. Everyone was aweseome! Here are some photos:
Continue reading

Mayoral Candidates Speak Out Against UTA Revision Plan

I have posted on this blog about UTA’s revision to its system and how it will adversely affect riders in Salt Lake Valley. It plans to not only decrease the number of routes (from 98 to 80) but also increase the fares.

At a forum yesterday organized by Crossroads Urban Center, several Salt Lake City Mayoral Candidates raised concerns about this plan. Here are some comments:

House Minority Leader Ralph Becker, D-Salt Lake City, wants the agency to go back and talk to riders, hold public hearings, and then come out with a proposal. He said UTA did not include input from riders when drafting the plan.
“UTA needs to understand that when it starts a process like this, it should not start with a proposal,” Becker said.
Former Salt Lake City Councilman Keith Christensen and Salt Lake County Councilwoman Jenny Wilson said the agency should look at using smaller buses or vans in areas where the number of riders is low. City Councilwoman Nancy Saxton said that UTA has designed its system to focus on commuters and that the city should eliminate free parking during Christmas to subsidize buses.
Surgeon J.P. Hughes said he would like to see buses operate for longer hours.

But UTA says that the new plan will be more reliable and efficient, even though The agency has received just over 2,000 comments about the plan. About 65 percent of the comments criticized the redesign, while 35 percent praised it, according to UTA.

It is clear that UTA is going to go ahead with its plan, even though it is also clear that most people are critical of it. What’s the point of public comment if they aren’t going to listen?

Ya Better Watch Out – Cheney is coming to town

Things are really heating up here in Utah over Dick Cheney’s visit to Utah on April 26 when he will speak at Commencement ceremonies that day.
Today’s Deseret News has announced an “alternative commencement” event, that I received an email about from a BYU student yesterday.

The alternative commencement group hopes to draw 1,000 to 2,000.
“A lot of people from different groups in Salt Lake have said they’re interested in coming down,”
[Ashley]Sanders[event organizer] said. “They’ve already chartered buses.”

Students at BYU who are unhappy with Cheney’s upcoming visit have just about secured Ralph Nader to be the featured speaker at that event:

I am part of a group of students and community members who oppose Dick Cheney coming to speak at BYU’s commencement. We are, among other things, working to organize an alternative commencement and have been in negotiations with Ralph Nader to come and speak at this alternative commencement.

The group is in the process of raising the $15,000 to secure Nader for this event.

“Operation Bite”

I have been hearing frequently more recently about the U.S.’s “Operation Bite” against Iran, scheduled for TODAY.  I have been participating in actions over the last week and a half to make noise about this.  Here is a photo of my friends holding a banner we made that made its debut yesterday, first in front of Channel 2 in Salt Lake City, where for an instant you could see the banner in the window behind the anchors on the 5pm news (they quickly shot away from that and moved the anchors), and then at the sidewalk vigil:


The issue is Iran’s development of nuclear weapons and the recent expediency in which they are developing them.  I have been scouring the news this morning in the limited time I have to see any indication of military aggression on the part of the U.S. against Iran and so far haven’t seen anything about the bombing campaign I had been reading about.

I keep reading and re-reading about the nuclear weapons issue with Iran and how the U.N. Security Council is discussion imposing stricter sanctions against Iran for developing nuclear weapons.

But the U.S. is planning to use nuclear weapons on Iran because of their development of nuclear weapons.  Why is that o.k.?  It is no secret that the U.S. is developing tests for the development of new nuclear weapons and new replacement warheads itself.  Why is that o.k.?  Why isn’t the U.N. Security Council making noise about that?  It doesn’t make sense.

Here are some news items collected over the last week:


Opinion/Commentary

Who will bite first, the U.S. or Iran?

Crossfire War – Pentagon Operation Bite – Iran’s Nuclear Program

News

Iranian president announces release of British naval personnel
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/04/04/africa/web0404-iran2.php

ABC News Exclusive: The Secret War Against Iran
http://blogs.abcnews.com/theblotter/2007/04/abc_news_exclus.html

Britain Adopts Conciliatory Tone with Iran
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/01/world/middleeast/01iran.html?_r=2&hp&oref=slogin&oref=slogin

Power Struggle in Iran Over Hostages
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article1596694.ece

Gulf Allies Reject Role in any Attack on Iran
http://www.yorkdispatch.com/nationworld/ci_5548268

Iran: Decision to withhold information due to fear of U.S., Israeli attack
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/844232.html  

US Ready to Strike Iran on Good Friday
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1173879220977&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

Any Casus Belli Will Do
http://www.antiwar.com/prather/?articleid=10749

U.S. Ready to Strike Iran in Early April
http://en.rian.ru/world/20070330/62861432.html

Iranian Official: Sailors May be Tried
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20070331/D8O76O400.html

Experts: US operation in Iran supposes usage of nuclear weapons
http://www.globalresearch.ca/PrintArticle.php?articleId=5248

Fate of Five Detained Iranians Unknown
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/03/30/192/

Iran Changed Coordinates of British Boats Say s British Ambassador
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Iran_Changed_Coordinates_Of_British_Boats_Says_British_Ambassador_999.html

Easter Surprise: Attack on Iran , New 9/11… or Worse
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/03/28/150/

USS Nimitz Scheduled to Depart for Persian Gulf
http://www.10news.com/news/11422067/detail.html

Russian Intelligence Sees U.S. Military Buildup on Iran Border
http://en.rian.ru/russia/20070327/62697703.html

Iraqi Gen: Brits Entered Iranian Waters
http://www.plenglish.com/article.asp?ID=%7B651827DC-B0C5-4F39-9C20-7060760139CF%7D)&language=EN

Carrier Stennis Joins Eisenhower for Exercises in Persian Gulf
http://content.hamptonroads.com/story.cfm?story=121837&ran=241052

Iran: El-Baradei Says Attack on Country Would be Catastrophic
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2007/01/20E65B32-383F-4778-A13D-1D438C4E2F34.html

 
For detailed analysis:

What do British sailors, fake water boundaries, a botched US raid in Iraq and a UK political scandal have in common? By Heather Wokusch
http://www.opednews.com/maxwrite/page.php?a=32938

Beyond Munich: The UN Security Council Helps Disarm a Prospective Further Victim of U.S. Aggression By Edward S. Herman and David Peterson
http://www.globalresearch.ca/PrintArticle.php?articleId=5248

The War on Iran
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=CHO20070401&articleId=5247

Iran: Washington’s Next Nuclear Target? By John Hallam
http://www.greenleft.org.au/2007/705/36618

War Without Win: A White Paper on Iran by William John Cox
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_william__070320_war_without_win_3a__a_.htm

The Redirection by Seymour M. Hersh
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/03/05/070305fa_fact_hersh%3F%25E2%2580%259D

Heads Up on Anti-Iran Propaganda by George Cheney
http://www.catalystmagazine.net/shorts–occasionals/politics-shorts/heads-up-on-anti-iran-propaganda.html

Regime Change is the Reason, Disarmament the Excuse (interview with former weapons inspector Scott Ritter)
http://www.antiwar.com/orig/horton.php?articleid=10595

What’s it Like Waiting Around to be Bombed?
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_russ_wel_070328_what_s_it_like_waiti.htm

Keeping All Options on the Table: A Roadmap to Negotiation or War?
http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4043

The View From Tehran
http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2007/02/21/letter_from_iran/



 

 

Coverage of BYU Protests Yesterday

Here is coverage of protests by BYU students yesterday regarding Dick Cheney’s visit as speaker for the Aprl 26 Commencement exercises:

Y. rally quite tame: Demos object to Cheney speech; other students protest the protest

By Tad Walch
Deseret Morning News

      PROVO — The only thing burned Wednesday at a midday campus protest at Brigham Young University was the students’ skin.

Students stage a sit-in Wednesday to protest Vice President Dick Cheney being the commencement speaker at BYU. (Stuart Johnson, Deseret Morning News)

Stuart Johnson, Deseret Morning News
Students stage a sit-in Wednesday to protest Vice President Dick Cheney being the commencement speaker at BYU.

      Student Democrats at the private, religious school left the burning-in-effigy of oppressive leaders to Cal-Berkeley and other public universities.
      Still, they considered the relatively tame sit-in a success because more than 300 students, faculty and staff demonstrated their concern about the choice of Vice President Dick Cheney as BYU’s commencement speaker on April 26.
      There were a couple of highlights. One woman wore a paper sack over her head. Another poured water over a second hooded student’s face to symbolize torture tactics supported by Cheney.
      “This is much larger than anyone expected,” said Byron Daynes, a political science professor who spent last year at the University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service. “As a William J. Clinton Fellow, I’m delighted.”
      So was German professor Rob McFarland, who like many of an estimated 50 faculty who joined the demonstration, hoped the protesters would behave themselves so the administration would OK future rallies at a school where they are scarce.
      “It’s very kind of BYU to provide this kind of venue where without vandalism and slander we can share ideas,” said McFarland, who earned a degree at Berkeley.
      The group did not call for BYU to pull Cheney’s invitation, although some demonstrators would like to see that happen.
      “I object to his speaking at commencement,” neuroscience major Heather Marsh said. “Generally commencement is for role models. I don’t think he is someone we should emulate. By protesting, we’re sending a message we don’t like the current trend, and that gives the government a chance to respond. That’s how a democracy works.”
      Most objected to the vice president’s policy on torture and what they said was his war profiteering through Halliburton. They also wanted to make it clear that BYU is not exclusively conservative.
The White House offered Cheney as a commencement speaker to BYU this spring because President Bush couldn’t accept the university’s invitation last year. The First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints then extended the invitation to Cheney in their roles as the leaders of BYU’s board of trustees.
      “The church is neutral but says to be politically active,” McFarland said. “They invited a political speaker, and I think it was a good idea for BYU. They’ve handled it well by making it a catalyst for discussions.”
      The dialogue will continue Monday with a panel discussion sponsored by BYU’s Kennedy Center for International Studies. Four panelists will discuss “Vice President Cheney and the Global War on Terror” in the Varsity Theater at 2 p.m.
      Wednesday’s sit-in was organized by Diane Bailey, president of the BYU College Democrats student club. Bailey obtained permission for the public forum from the dean of Student Life, Vern Heperi, and she kept a tight rein on her charges, telling them to sit inside the orange-tape circle and talk quietly.
      Bailey also asked Heperi for help policing the event.
      “I told the dean I wanted help to make sure causes against our church did not hijack our event,” she said.
      That led to a couple of scenes where administrators pointed out questionable signs to Bailey. She asked four protesters to put away their signs.
      One of them, BYU graduate Tom Doggett, created a placard with pictures of four men — Cheney, LDS Church President Gordon B. Hinckley, deceased former LDS President Spencer W. Kimball and Elder Russell M. Nelson of the church’s Quorum of the Twelve. Church members revere President Hinckley as a prophet and consider Elder Nelson one of 12 living apostles.

Matt Blood, right, holds a sign in favor of Vice President Dick Cheney. BYU's GOP club held a rally in response to Democrats'. (Stuart Johnson, Deseret Morning News)

Stuart Johnson, Deseret Morning News
Matt Blood, right, holds a sign in favor of Vice President Dick Cheney. BYU’s GOP club held a rally in response to Democrats’.

      The sign mimicked the “Sesame Street” song, “One of these things is not like the other. One of these things just doesn’t belong.”
      “I love the prophet and apostles,” said Doggett, who complied with Bailey’s request by folding the sign four ways and then refused to show it to photographers. “I’d rather have them come speak at commencement.”
      While the message didn’t attack the church, some might take it that way, Bailey said.
      “If you put up pictures of the prophet or First Presidency at a protest like this, the automatic assumption for some is that it’s an attack,” Bailey said. Bailey has applied for permission to conduct another demonstration on the day Cheney speaks.
      Several Democrats expressed frustration with the College Republicans student club because it held a simultaneous “pro-BYU” party about 100 yards away. Most of that smaller group’s signs proclaimed the GOP club supported BYU and the church’s First Presidency.
      “The implication is we don’t (support BYU),” complained German professor Alan Keele. “That’s a Karl Rove tactic — to take our message and twist it into something it’s not.”
      While far fewer people stood inside the blue-tape circle at the Republican rally, club president David Lassen said the group gave away 600 cookies to passing students and about 400 BYU-blue armbands signifying support for Cheney.
      The club also gathered thank-you notes for Cheney that Lassen hopes to deliver to the vice president.
      The lack of sustained turnout was no surprise to Adam Stoddard, a political science major from Bountiful. “This campus is conservative but apolitical, not motivated to come out and hold a sign,” he said. The Democrats handed out BYU-white armbands. At the height of the sit-in, the club presidency counted 270 protesters. Several more came and went as the two-hour rally continued, putting total participation over the 300 mark.
      The group ended the sit-in with a spontaneous, hearty rendition of the national anthem.


E-mail: twalch@desnews.com

BYU protests

ALAN CHOATE AND NATHAN JOHNSON – Daily Herald   

Brigham Young University students had three camps to choose from Wednesday in the debate over Vice President Dick Cheney’s scheduled graduation speech later this month.

THEY COULD HAVE JOINED the BYU College Democrats next to the Joseph F. Smith Building to criticize the decision to invite Cheney.

They could have gone one quad over to where the College Republicans were urging people to respect the school’s choices and honor the vice president.

Or, they could have joined the thousands of students who simply walked by one or both demonstrations as they went about their day.

In all, several hundred students expressed an opinion one way or another, and the discussion is going to continue: BYU Democrats President Diane Bailey said there will be another demonstration on April 26, the day Cheney’s speech takes place.

“We’re here to promote political dialogue,” she said. “We are so pleased with how many people came out, with how mature and responsible the dialogue was and how we focused on the policies and not on ad hominem attacks.”

For the most part, the protest was a quiet, seated affair, with Cheney critics holding up signs pointing to problems with the Bush administration’s policies and decisions.

The College Democrats passed out fliers listing reasons why Cheney isn’t a good choice as a commencement speaker.

The grievances included complaints that “Cheney’s controversial actions do not represent a model our students should follow,” criticisms of the Iraq war (such as the war being preemptive and the “misleading use of weak intelligence to elicit fear”), and ties to Halliburton and no-bid wartime contracts awarded to that firm. Cheney is Halliburton’s former CEO.

In the Marigold Quad, meanwhile, the BYU College Republicans organized a counter-demonstration meant to show support for the school and the vice president’s visit.

Students there handed out blue armbands, circulated a letter thanking Cheney for agreeing to speak and offered cookies, brownies and lemonade. People came and went, with between 50 and 75 supporters gathered at any given time.

It was much more informal than the anti-Cheney protest, more like a backyard barbecue than a demonstration — albeit a barbecue where a number of the attendees were journalists with cameras and microphones.

Supporters stayed away from political and policy statements, emphasizing instead Cheney’s long public service record and the distinction of having a vice president — any vice president — come to the school.

“We’re not just supporting Dick Cheney,” said student Amanda Malaman, who was handing out armbands. “We’re supporting the decision BYU has made.”

“We wanted to focus on showing respect for the office,” said David Lassen, chairman of the BYU College Republicans.

Lassen said he knew that viewpoint needed to be expressed when news of the anti-Cheney protests hit national news outlets.

“We decided that we definitely needed to have something to show what the majority of BYU students believe,” he said. “We wanted to show that BYU for the most part is still a group of conservative people who, though we have a healthy diversity, support the vice president coming.”

At one point, several pro-Cheney students decided to march with their signs to the anti-Cheney rally. They stopped and came back, though, after Lassen and others warned them that provoking a confrontation could get the pro-Cheney rally shut down.

BYU spokeswoman Carri Jenkins said that, overall, the protest was handled very well. Jenkins credited student organizers for handling any problems.

This story appeared in The Daily Herald on page A1.

Students Stomp BYU Campus Regarding Cheney Visit

Yes Or No? BYU Students Sound Off On Cheney Visit

By Doug Ware – KUTV.com

(KUTV) PROVO – Is it appropriate for Vice President Dick Cheney to deliver the graduation speech at BYU later this month — given his involvement in world politics and the controversial war in Iraq? Hundreds of students voiced their opinions on Wednesday, during two separate protests which were fully approved by school administrators.

Hundreds of Republican and Democratic students from on-campus clubs began dueling protests at 11:00 a.m. Those in favor of the vice president’s visit gathered at the Marigold Quad.

“We are just showing our support for BYU,” said Cali Nicoll, who supports Cheney’s visit. “We’re just really excited that Vice President Cheney is taking the time to come and speak to us at graduation.”

“Someone with that much experience… I don’t care what side of the aisle he sits on. Everyone can learn from him,” said Matt Waldrip, of the BYU College Republicans.

“I respect the institution, though I don’t respect his policies,” said Bob Rees, who says he is excited for the vice president’s appearance.

Across campus, students who oppose Cheney’s scheduled commencement speech, protested at the Joseph Smith Building Quad. Both sides were color-coded. Supporters wore blue and those opposed wore white.

Some students opposed to the visit held signs that read, “America, one nation under surveillance” and “Faithful mormons against Cheney.”

“Dick Cheney doesn’t speak for me,” said one protester. “We don’t think Dick Cheney is a very good speaker to represent the graduating class because he stands for war and lies, corruption. BYU is about truth and honor and peace.”

“We don’t support what he has done in his position,” said another demonstrator.

“[BYU has] set a precedent of inviting church leaders to speak at commencement because that’s what this university is about,” said one woman who opposes the vice president’s scheduled speech. “And I feel that having a politically-charged figure, despite his office, is inappropriate.”

Some students who oppose Cheney’s visit believe that if the university invites him to speak, it should be in the form of a discussion forum rather than a commencement speech.

Last week, BYU administrators approved students’ request to stage protests on-campus regarding the vice president’s upcoming visit. However, both sides must follow strict protesting guidelines laid out by the university.

Wednesday’s protests were peaceful and campus police were not needed to control the crowd.

Vice President Cheney is scheduled to speak at BYU’s graduation ceremony on April 26, 2007.

MORE:
 Slideshow: Protests at BYU
See Also: BYU gets Vice Pres. Cheney to speak at graduation
See Also: BYU says ‘OK’ to anti-Cheney protest
See Also: Some BYU students want Cheney’s speech canceled

BYU Campus Protests Dick Cheney Speech


By DEBBIE HUMMEL
Associated Press Writer

PROVO, Utah — Some students and faculty on one of the nation’s most conservative campuses want Brigham Young University to withdraw an invitation for Vice President Dick Cheney to speak at commencement later this month.

Critics at the school question whether Cheney sets a good example for graduates, citing his promotion of faulty intelligence before the Iraq war and his role in the CIA leak scandal.

The private university, which is owned by the Mormon church, has “a heavy emphasis on personal honesty and integrity in all we do,” said Warner Woodworth, a professor at BYU’s business school.

“Cheney just doesn’t measure up,” he said.

Woodworth is helping organize an online petition asking that the school rescind its invitation to the vice president. In its first week, the petition collected more than 2,300 signatures, mostly from people describing themselves as students, alumni or members of the church.

The display of dissent is rare for a university that has been voted the nation’s most “stone-cold sober” school nine years in a row in the annual Princeton Review of party schools.

Students at BYU adhere to a strict honor code that forbids everything from drinking coffee to wearing shorts or short skirts. The school’s 30,000 students seldom even stray from campus sidewalks, leaving its lawns pristine.

“Cougars don’t cut corners,” is how one saying describes students, most of whom belong to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

But student Diane Bailey, who is leading a protest Wednesday against Cheney’s visit, said students are not “robotic conservatives.”

Bailey and others are upset by Cheney’s role in promoting faulty intelligence that led the U.S. into the Iraq war. They also cite his proximity to the CIA leak scandal in which his chief of staff, I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, was convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice.

Cheney’s BYU speech is the first of two commencement addresses he is scheduled to give this spring. The other will be May 26 at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.

Both are institutions where Cheney could have expected to receive a warm reception, Woodworth said.

Utah has consistently supported the administration, delivering President Bush his largest margin of victory in any state in 2000 and 2004. In Utah County, home to BYU, about 85 percent of voters chose the Bush-Cheney ticket in 2004.

Richard Davis, a political-science professor and adviser for the college Democrats, said the uproar over Cheney’s visit is evidence of a rift within the school and church that belies the faith’s larger claim of being politically neutral.

“He should be invited to come. He should speak. But let’s not send the signal that we’re abandoning our political neutrality,” Davis said. “There is no political gospel in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.”

The church has a policy of political neutrality and issues an annual statement declaring that both major political parties include ideals that Mormons could embrace.

“It’s one thing to invite some milquetoast Republican. But Dick Cheney?” Davis said. The protest reflects lack of support for Cheney, as well as “the larger issue of diversity and more liberal people within the BYU community and within the LDS church.”

Historically dissent has not been well received at the school. Last year, a BYU professor wrote a newspaper opinion piece opposing the church’s call for a constitutional ban on gay marriage. In response, the school announced it would not renew Jeffrey Nielsen’s contract.

Cheney’s office said his commencement speech would not have a political theme.

The school approved a permit for the college Democrats’ Wednesday protest and is working on finding a protest site for the day of Cheney’s speech.

“We recognize that members of our campus community are entitled to their opinions,” said university spokeswoman Carri Jenkins. “Political neutrality does not mean there cannot be any political discussion.”

Which is it: Food or Beer?

I don’t get it.

The other night I went out with some friends for pizza and beer.  I was taxed twice on the beer.

The receipt said this:

Food tax:   “X” amount
Beer tax:   “X” amount
Food tax on Beer:  “X” amount

Huh? 

Rocky Mountain Power Doesn’t Like the Suggeston to Ban New Coal-Fired Power Plants

Of course they don’t.  Why would someone who profits off of human needs be FOR something that could potentially diminish their profits?

As a follow up to yesterday’s news that Utah Doctors want to see some action to clean up our air, today’s Deseret News, in
Bad-air warning raises questions, reports that our power company is opposed to that suggestion.

Their [the doctors] position is that bad air along the Wasatch Front amounts to a health crisis that will only grow worse without bold steps. Among steps they propose are a ban on new coal-fired power plants because of mercury the plants release, improved mass transit to reduce vehicles on the road, requiring freeway drivers to slow to 55 miles per hour on smoggy days, and asking school bus drivers not to idle in school yards while waiting for students.

Rocky Mountain Powers’ response:

“If policymakers determine that they do not want electricity generated from coal,” said Rocky Mountain Power spokesman Dave Eskelsen, “we’re going to have to get it somewhere else, and it would be a lot more expensive.”
      What about the physicians’ position that some alternative methods of producing power are no more expensive than coal-burning generators?
Eskelsen said wind power with federal subsidies has come down to a “reasonable range” of dollars spent per kilowatt-hours produced.
But wind is available only about 30 percent of the time at the best sites, he said, and coal- and gas-burning plants produce power more than 85 percent of the time.
      Also, the alternative methods don’t give enough power to meet needs. A large wind turbine installation is about 100 megawatts and some proposals have been made to build wind projects that approach 300 megawatts capacity, he said.
      “But your typical coal-fired power plants are somewhere between 500 and 900 megawatts per unit, and frequently there are several units constructed at each location.”
      Based on projected growth of demand, renewable energy and conservation “are not going to be able to supply the customer in the future,” Eskelsen said.
      “We will need all of the energy efficiency and other demand-side resources we can get, all of the renewable energy we can acquire,” he added. “And we believe that we will still need electricity generation from coal and natural gas.”

From the UT Environmental Quality Dept:
Dianne Nielson, executive director of the Utah Division of Environmental Quality who was present during the Friday briefing, said she appreciates the doctors coming forward and raising their concerns.

Now here’s what I’m talkin’ ’bout:
But cleaner cars and fuels [re: stepping up emissions standards] won’t make much difference as long as the number of motorists increases, she said.
      If mass transit can carry more than the present 2 percent of people who would otherwise drive, “if we can double that, if we can triple that,” pollution would be reduced, Nielson said.

That’s my favorite part of this article. 

REDUCE THE NUMBER OF DRIVERS – USE MASS TRANSIT – WALK, BIKE.  It’s a start to decreasing pollution along the Wasatch Front – and promoting healthier lifestyles.